66

Current situation: I have dependencies in my project that I solve by using dependency injection. I want to take the next logic step by using a dependency injection container (DIC) to ease the management of my dependencies and to lazy-load classes.

I looked at Bucket, Pimple, and sfServiceContainer, ran some test and really appreciate how DIC’s work. I’d probably go for Pimple because of its simplicity and raw power. If I didn’t have this problem:

Due to the abstraction that DIC’s offer, the IDE I’m using (PHPStorm) no longer understands what’s going on in my code. It doesn’t understand that $container['mailer'] or $sc->mailer is holding a class object. I also tried Netbeans IDE: same problem.

This is really a problem for me because my IDE becomes useless. I don’t want to program without code hints, autocompletion and refactoring tools when dealing with classes. And I don’t want my IDE to find all kinds of false positives when validating code.

So my question is: Has anyone dealt with this problem and found a solution?

2
  • 7
    you can try via phpdocumentor tags /** @var $inst My_Object **/ $inst = $sc->mailer;
    – Rufinus
    Jun 18, 2011 at 11:47
  • You can vote on WI-17116 if you are interested to have support for this in PHPStorm. Nov 4, 2014 at 7:30

6 Answers 6

59

You can define class of the variable 'manually':

/** @var YourClassType $mailer */
$mailer = $container['mailer'];

In PhpStorm (and by standards), use two asterisks and write the data type before the name of the variable.

You can write the data type without the name of the variable (but not the name without the data type).

8
  • The link you posted is about class variables.
    – hakre
    Jun 18, 2011 at 12:01
  • 2
    @hakre: It applies to normal variables, too ;)
    – NikiC
    Jun 18, 2011 at 12:01
  • 1
    @nikic: How do you read this title: @var - Document the data type of a class variable? Would match the scope of PHPDoc fairly well, but whatever, no need to be pedantic.
    – hakre
    Jun 18, 2011 at 12:03
  • 3
    netbeans does not support this example (thought it should) but does take types from phpdoc tags.
    – thevikas
    Dec 16, 2011 at 7:19
  • 7
    I think the trick is that you want to define this once in the container, not each time you use it - littering the code with phpdoc.
    – MikeMurko
    Mar 22, 2013 at 17:26
46

While you can certainly tell your IDE the type of the object pulled out of your container every time you access it, it's better to do it once. Both of the following solutions involve subclassing the container. I just started using Pimple which recommends doing this anyway.

For containers that use instance members accessed with -> or exposed via the magic __get method, you can tell your IDE what type they hold. This is great because it doesn't involve any additional parsing when the code is run--only the IDE is bothered by it.

/**
 * My container. It contains things. Duh.
 *
 * @property MyService $service
 * @property MyDao $dao
 */
class MyContainer extends Container { }

For Pimple and other containers that act as arrays you can create accessor functions for the top-level objects you'll need. While it means more parsing when the container is created, it should be done once and kept in APC. I vastly prefer a method over array access anyway since it places the easy-to-forget array key inside an auto-completed method.

class MyContainer extends Pimple
{
    /**
     * @return MyService
     */
    public function getMyService() {
        return $this['service'];
    }
}

BTW, for type-hinting inline variables with @var in NetBeans you need to use /* with one asterisk. This is not a doc-block comment and doesn't work with /** or //. Also, the name comes before the type.

public function foo() {
    /* @var $service MyService */
    $service = $container['service'];
    ...
}
8
  • 3
    +1 for the hint about single asterisk. the double asterisk was breaking it for me. thx. Jul 11, 2012 at 3:38
  • The single asterisck syntax works on Eclipse PDT too, thank you!
    – paul.ago
    Apr 15, 2013 at 14:08
  • In PhpStorm, the double asterisk works. /** @var MyService $service */.
    – donquixote
    Feb 27, 2015 at 17:49
  • And for the @property docblock.. This can be used in combination with magic __get(). But does it also work with array access? I doubt it. (At least in PhpStorm)
    – donquixote
    Feb 27, 2015 at 17:51
  • @donquixote No, @property is only for property access via ->. For array access you'll need to created accessor functions until a new annotation is created for PHPDoc and implemented by IDEs. Feb 27, 2015 at 22:04
14

As the IDE's do not exectue the code, they do not know and need some help form you. I know this works for Eclipse and other IDEs as well: Hint the variable's type.

Netbeans / Phpstorm / PDT / ZendStudio Example

/* @var $mailer MailerInterface */
$mailer = $sc->mailer

Code complete starts to work again on $mailer.

For PDT it's important that:

  1. The comment starts with one * only.
  2. First the variable name, than the hint.

Alternative Comment Variants

As it was subject to a lot of discussion, it can differ between IDEs. However most IDEs support variable hinting for inline code variables in the way above. So depending on the IDE this might be written differently but similar, like here with two asterisks in front:

/** @var $mailer MailerInterface */

PHPDoc compatibility

PHPDoc parsers can have a problem if you mimic the class var doc-comment for inline code as so:

/** @var MailerInterface $mailer  */

That documentation is normally used for class variables (@var - Document the data type of a class variable). PHPDoc is then missing the definition of the class variable after the comment which involves a burden for QA.

However some IDEs will offer code completition for simple variables as well when written in PHPDoc clas-variable style. I do not know if that has side-effects for the code-completition of the current class then as a new member might get introduced that actually does not exists.

14
  • please add another asterix in order to make it a valid phpdoc comment.
    – NikiC
    Jun 18, 2011 at 11:48
  • 2
    Second example shows wrong usage of phpdoc-comment. Type should be BEFORE variable only. It works just to support old code. manual.phpdoc.org/HTMLframesConverter/default/phpDocumentor/…
    – OZ_
    Jun 18, 2011 at 11:52
  • @nikic: I dare to not do so as this is function body code not a phpdoc comment.
    – hakre
    Jun 18, 2011 at 11:55
  • @hakre so PDT is a piece of crap. Because standard of phpdoc tells to write datatype first (see link in previous comment).
    – OZ_
    Jun 18, 2011 at 11:56
  • @OZ_: I beg your pardon, but it looks like that you have misread the phpdoc specs you linked which is about class variables. This is not a class variable but code in the function body. PDT naturally supports PHPDoc comments for class variables according to the specs you've linked.
    – hakre
    Jun 18, 2011 at 11:58
10

For those who came here from google.

PHPStorm actually provides a way to solve this kind of problem instead of writing PHPDocs over and over again — creating and setting .phpstorm.meta.php file in a way described here gains smoothly working autocomplete and type inspections.

1

Pimple just introduce container builder principe. If you understand it, you don't need Pimple any more:


class Container
{
    private $shared = array();

    public function getService() {
        return new Service(
            this->getFirstDependence(),
            this->getSecondDependence()
        );
    }

    protected function getFirstDependence() {
        return new FirstDependence(
            this->getSecondDependence()
        );
    }

    protected function getSecondDependence() {
        return isset($this->shared[__METHOD__]) ? $this->shared[__METHOD__] : $this->shared[__METHOD__] =
        new SecondDependence(
        );
    }
}

This way Pimple does not hide type of object in mixed $c['some key']. You would have autocomplete suggestions when edit your container. Phpstorm is able to autoresolve method return type from your code. And you would have clear container. You can ever override container:


class TestContainer extends Container
{
    protected function getFirstDependence() {
        return new FirstDependenceMock(
        );
    }
}

To be honest container written in 'programming' lanuage is wrong way to go. Container responsibility is to bring initialized graph of objects to caller. Having access to 'programming language' allows to violate that responsibility with easy. Some DSL for configuring dependency is better. Moreover most of original dependency information (argument typehints of constructors) is just ignored by Pimple and sfDepenencyContainer making your configuration bloated and fragile.

2
  • 2
    The only problem with this approach is that it's not object-oriented - it just uses classes... In your example, Container is not reusable, since you'll need to add/remove methods to it every time you have a new dependency. With Pimple, you just register new dependencies and never change the internals of the class like you do (classes should be closed to modifications). Oct 29, 2013 at 13:21
  • Just to make sure people don't take this in consideration, I would strongly advise against this. Basically what I being done here is creating a serviceprovider with a pre-configured dependency chain. Not maintainable.
    – Stephan-v
    Jan 30, 2017 at 9:02
1

I know that the question is about DIC only, but there is a Silex Pimple Dumper service provider which dumps the container to a json file. The same author wrote a plugin for PHPStorm which can read that file and open the autocomplete with the service names and its type (class, string and etc). I'm using those two components and I can say that are good options for auto completion for Silex/Pimple.

1
  • That is exactly what I was looking for. This changes everything. :D Jun 9, 2016 at 8:29

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